Instalar o Steam
Iniciar sessão
|
Idioma
简体中文 (Chinês Simplificado)
繁體中文 (Chinês Tradicional)
日本語 (Japonês)
한국어 (Coreano)
ไทย (Tailandês)
Български (Búlgaro)
Čeština (Checo)
Dansk (Dinamarquês)
Deutsch (Alemão)
English (Inglês)
Español-España (Espanhol de Espanha)
Español-Latinoamérica (Espanhol da América Latina)
Ελληνικά (Grego)
Français (Francês)
Italiano (Italiano)
Bahasa Indonesia (Indonésio)
Magyar (Húngaro)
Nederlands (Holandês)
Norsk (Norueguês)
Polski (Polaco)
Português (Brasil)
Română (Romeno)
Русский (Russo)
Suomi (Finlandês)
Svenska (Sueco)
Türkçe (Turco)
Tiếng Việt (Vietnamita)
Українська (Ucraniano)
Relatar problema de tradução
Then, if you have Wine or protontricks installed, run the installer provided in the guide. Doesn't matter how you start it as long as you can pick the game directory in the installer.
After that is done, simply download the DLL (second download) and overwrite the one in the game install.
thanks lightwo
Yeah, Very High preset should work that way ideally, but if you play on Steam Deck at 1920x1200 resolution with High preset, you get real anti-aliasing advantage, every line is so smooth. At default Steam Deck resolution Split/Second looks like sh*t even with Very High preset: you see all the pixels 😅
I use this trick with many games on Deck: Burnout Paradise (runs great at 1920x1200 even with highest graphics settings), Prince of Persia (2008 and Sands trilogy), Silent Hill (2, 3), Rayman 3. The only old game where I saw no difference (where built-in anti-aliasing really works as it should without need to upscale resolution in game properties) is original Sleeping Dogs (not Definitive edition). For some reasons upscaling via game properties works better on a lot of old games